user-avatar
Today is Wednesday
May 23, 2012

Tag: phone

January 3, 2012

You Know You’re Living in 2012 when…

by admin — Categories: Jokes — Tags: , Comments Off

Old but still true today.
1. You accidentally enter your password on the microwave.

2. You haven’t played Solitaire with real cards in years.

3. You have a list of 15 phone numbers to reach your family of 4.

4. You e-mail the person who works at the desk next to you.

5. Your reason for not staying in touch with friends and family is that they don’t have e-mail addresses.

6. You pull up in your own driveway and use your cell phone to see if anyone is home to help you carry in the groceries..

7. Every commercial on television has a web site at the bottom of the screen.

8. Leaving the house without your cell phone, which you didn’t have the first 20 or 30 (or 50) years of your life, is now a cause for panic and you turn around to go and get it.

10. You get up in the morning and go on line before getting your coffee.

11. You start tilting your head sideways to smile. : )

12 You’re reading this and nodding and laughing.

13. Even worse, you know exactly to whom you are going to forward this message.

14. You are too busy to notice there was no #9 on this list.

15. You actually scrolled back up to check that there wasn’t#9 on this list

AND NOW YOU ARE LAUGHING at yourself.

January 3, 2012

The Chorus Boy Chronicles: Gone, Over the Rainbow, Back Soon by Brian Spitulnik

by admin — Categories: Fun Stuff — Tags: , , , , , , Comments Off

One humid July evening in 2010, my agent called to ask if I’d be willing to leave Chicago for a spot opening up in the revival of La Cage aux Folles. I had been in Chicago for over three years at that point, and had more or less stopped auditioning. But the idea of being able to say (to whom, I wasn’t sure) that I had done not one but two Broadway shows still had the appealing ring of achievement to it, even if it meant I’d have to do some seriously strenuous choreography dressed as a French showgirl eight times a week as one of the Cagelles in La Cage aux Folles.

For the La Cage audition, my agent told me to be prepared to learn a dance combination or two, sing sixteen bars of a traditional musical theater song, and perform a routine in full drag to a recording of “It’s Raining Men.” The audition was to be the following morning at ten, and my agent seemed to assume I was in possession of a trunk overflowing with heels, a room in my apartment reserved solely for wigs, and a fully choreographed routine and developed drag persona ready to perform on a moment’s notice. I was in possession of none of the above.

I’m the swing at Chicago, which means I am at the theater every night like the rest of the cast. But unlike everyone else, whose bodies are put through the grind of performing eight shows a week, I either watch the evening’s performance or sit in my dressing room for two and a half hours, doing things like reading, watching TV, or, on that humid night in July, working on my drag persona. That is, unless one of the ensemble guys is out sick or on vacation or is injured in the middle of the performance. Then, of course, I throw on my costume, run down the six flights of stairs, and get myself onstage.

When the Chicago overture began that night and I was alone in my dressing room, I sat down at my spot in front of the light bulb lined mirror, opened my laptop, and began searching YouTube for clips of drag queens doing their drag-show thing. To be honest, drag queens had always scared the shit out of me. They were often so abrasive, so hostile toward their audience, and all that garish makeup, those games of illusion, had a way of making me queasy. The few times I’d been to drag shows, I’d been reminded of the jitters I felt as a seven year old, watching my older cousin play soccer. Sitting in the bleachers, I had always been terrified I’d for some reason be forced to join in and play the game, too. Just as I’d always known I was embarrassingly terrible at soccer, I’ve always held the deep-seated belief that I’m just not man enough to convincingly pull off dressing like a woman.

I started looking around my cluttered, triangular dressing room for something to either inspire or save me from that audition. But between the crumbling plaster walls, the mildewed plastic shower stall in the corner, the harsh florescent lights, the racks of faded mesh costumes, and the sealed shut, blacked out window that faced a parking garage, I was finding neither inspiration nor salvation. I started wondering if I really wanted a second Broadway show all that badly.

I closed my laptop, ready to call my agent back and cancel the audition appointment. Then my eyes fell on the stack of books I kept on my dressing room table. Beneath volumes of John Cheever and Chekhov short stories was a copy of Me and My Shadows, a memoir by Lorna Luft. Ms. Luft is the woman who has spent her life unfortunately known as Judy Garland’s other daughter. A friend of mine was the book’s editor and had recently given me a copy (which, I am not ashamed to admit, had made me really, really excited). I had always had a thing about Judy. When I was growing up, family-bonding time had, after all, included renting old MGM musicals, eating oversized bowls of popcorn, and shushing each other for singing along with the songs and reciting the dialogue to the movies we’d seen again and again and again. More than once or twice, I had faked elaborate illnesses to stay home from school to watch a Fred Astaire or Gene Kelly marathon on AMC. But it had always been all about Judy Garland for me; that vulnerability, that impeccable comedic timing, and, of course, that voice.

I flipped through the photos of Ms. Lorna’s memoir, then reopened my computer and found Judy doing “Get Happy” in her black blazer and fedora on YouTube. It had been years since I’d watched that clip, but obsessive viewings of the That’s Entertainment series in my adolescence seemed to have stuck with me. Somehow, the choreography came galloping to the front of my brain and out my limbs as if I’d been rehearsing it every day for years. I then pulled up a recording of “It’s Raining Men” and danced Judy’s choreography to its disco beat. Suddenly, without a wig or makeup or heels, I was doing drag, and I found myself thinking, inexplicably, of my father.

It wasn’t my father’s many appearances on the community theater stages around Maryland that I was recalling. Rather, I was hearing his words and directives as he coached me for a role in Adventure Theater Summer Day Camp’s production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. I was nine years old and playing the Pharaoh, an Elvis inspired character that got to sing a killer rock song at the beginning of Act II. Nearly every day of that three-week summer session, I would come home from camp, dunk my head in the bathroom sink, then sculpt my hair into a pompadour with a squirt of Dep gel the size of five stacked quarters. I would then run through my song, choreography and all, six times in front of the mirror until my dad yelled up to tell me it was time for dinner. After dinner, I’d ask him to help me work on my moves, and the coaching would begin.

“It’s the element of surprise,” my father said to me. “Let’s try it again.”

I was standing on my bed, my sister’s hairbrush clasped in my right hand like a microphone. My five-year-old brother, Max, stood at the foot of the bed, aping my swiveled stance. My dad pressed play on the boom box and a steady descending baseline from the original Broadway cast recording of Joseph pounded out. I began popping my knee in time to the music, my lip curling up. My dad had told me that the trick to being a great performer was to surprise the audience: just when they think they can predict who you are and what you’ll do, you give them a spasm, a shift that springs from stillness, and bam, you’re entirely reinvented in their eyes.

I sang along with the recording, the Mississippi drawl I’d gleaned from repeated listenings of “Jailhouse Rock” sticking to the tune automatically. I ended the song on one knee, swinging my arm into a triumphant fist pump on the final button. My brother and dad applauded while I sat down on the bed, wiping sweat from my forehead and neck.

“That was better,” Max said, jumping up and down on my bed. “I thought that was really better.”

“Good, Briny,” my dad said. “Let’s take it from the verse again. This time remember: focus your gaze, find that stillness.”

I knew that if I absorbed my dad’s advice, I could make my performance great. But it had been my experience that the perfect costume could elevate any performance from great to legendary. I figured that whatever Carol, Adventure Theater’s bobbed costume mistress, had cooked up for me that year would help me focus and find something close to that perfect stillness.

“The Pharaoh is the king,” Carol said later that week, handing me a gold sequined vest in the theater’s mothball-scented dressing room. “That’s why Andrew Lloyd Webber is a genius. Do you get it? Pharaoh? The King? Elvis is the King? Genius.”

I was starting to put the vest on over my t-shirt when Carol said, “Try on the whole shebang, no T-shirt under that vest. Let’s get the total effect.”

Moments later, I moved out from behind the dressing curtain and stood on a square platform before the three-way mirror. The gold vest twinkled above my bare torso and reached just below my bottom ribs. I was a chunky nine-year-old, and my stomach hung over the black spandex biker shorts Carol had given me. I sucked in my belly button and, fingers shaking, began to button the gold vest.

“No, no,” Carol said, slapping my hand away. “Give the people what they’re paying for.”

I turned from side to side, taking in my image from every angle of the three-way mirror. There he was, a little Jewish boy from Potomac in a sparkling sequined vest and black spandex shorts, standing in front of a mirror, thinking he was Elvis.

“And now for the final touch,” Carol said, bending down to help me into the rhinestone-studded gold platform shoes she held. I slid my feet into the shoes and teetered for a moment before finding my balance.

“Look out, Adventure Theater,” Carol said. “Elvis has officially entered the building.”

On the day of the Joseph performance, I stood upstage center on an elevated platform, hidden by a network of overlapping bamboo fans. When I finally heard my cue—a descending bass line plunked out from the piano in the orchestra pit—the bamboo fans parted to reveal Elvis in spandex and a sequined gold vest, standing with feet wide, chin down over the right shoulder, holding a microphone. I snapped my head to the audience and sang the verse through a curled lip. Blinded by lights and glittering harem girl outfits around me, I couldn’t see the faces in the audience, only blurred outlines of heads bobbing and swaying to the music.

The number sailed by, every movement and vocal lick I’d been rehearsing with my dad came tumbling out in perfect, dynamic succession. As I jumped from the elevated platform in my gold platform shoes, I strode through my choreography, sure of my footing, fully believing myself to be the king. Finally, the tempo slowed to half time for the big finish. I got down on one knee, sang the last notes with everything I had, then pumped the air with my fist. The lights bumped to a white heat and the audience leapt to their feet, screaming and applauding, as I remained frozen in my final pose. Over top of the applause, I heard my dad’s familiar, sustained, Woooohooooooo. I turned my head to the audience to smile and say into the microphone, “Thank you. Thank you very much.”

As I watched myself in the dressing room mirror nearly twenty years later, reaching up with splayed fingers like Judy Garland, leaning back with the microphone for a long note like Judy Garland, rocking my hips over bent knees like Judy Garland, wobbling slightly and gesturing with crooked elbows and loose wrists like Judy Garland, I could hear my dad’s voice telling me to focus my gaze, to plant my feet, to find that perfect stillness. It was odd, and a little unnerving, that though I knew my dad was sitting in his office overlooking Farragut Square, reviewing legal briefs and facilitating transactions, he was also reflected back at me in the dressing room mirror, helping me become a chorus boy who was man enough to perform in drag.

The audition for La Cage aux Folles went better than I could have anticipated. I can-canned with a flexibility I didn’t know I still had; I leapt in the air and landed in the splits wearing the black strappy heels I’d borrowed from Chicago. I sang my sixteen bars of music (wearing loafers, not heels), and, when it was time, I put on my black blazer and black fedora and got ready to do Judy. I told myself it would be better to look like I wasn’t trying too hard, so I didn’t wear makeup or a wig or even the black pantyhose I’d brought along. I did my Judy impersonation in front of not only the creative team and the casting directors, but also the dozen or so other guys auditioning who were, by and large, in much more involved states of dress than I was. One guy wore a full-on Geisha costume; another did a flamenco routine in a fringe skirt with a rose in his long, black wig. Others went the more wild and raunchy drag queen route, wearing huge, teased wigs, and glittery tube tops while accosting their audience of auditioners with lap dances and pelvic thrusts.

When it was my turn to take the floor, I was clammy with nerves, but hoped my visible trembling was adding authenticity to my Judy impression and perhaps making up for my half-assed costume. As “It’s Raining Men” wailed from the rehearsal room speakers, I found it impossible to, even for a moment, focus my gaze or find any kind of stillness at all. My mind kept leaving the audition room to think about my dad.

I often wonder what kind of performer he would have been had he dedicated his life to music instead of to us, his family. He had been an oboe student in the competitive conservatory at Oberlin, but had packed up his oboe after graduation, gotten a Masters in social work, and, after marrying my mother, went to law school so he could provide for her in the manner to which he thought they ought to become accustomed. His oboe sat locked in its case next to the upright piano at our house for years, then was buried in the storage room, where it remained while he built his law practice, shuttled us to and from dance classes and rehearsals, and coached us on our endless string of performances.

I’ve tried to picture my father seated on stage, illuminated by a single spotlight, playing his oboe and swaying to its rhythms. Would he have been flashy and demonstrative when he played? Or would he have been subtle and subdued, allowing the music to speak for itself? I don’t think I’ll ever know for sure. He has refused to play that oboe for as long as I can remember, claiming that the squeaking would be unbearable to our trained ears. But the last time I was home in Maryland, I did notice that my father’s oboe, still in its closed case, had made its way out of the storage room and was sitting next to the antique upright piano in the living room. I didn’t ask him if he’d started playing it again. I figured that if he had, it was something he was doing, finally, just for himself, in his own rare moments of stillness.

When I finished my Judy routine, I wobbled over to the side of the rehearsal room, allowing the next guy to strut his glittery, shimmery stuff. I leaned against the wall, panting, my ankles throbbing.

In the end, I didn’t get that role in La Cage aux Folles. It went to the one guy at the audition whose agent had failed to tell him to wear drag, a cute little blond with a muscley body who had simply stripped down to his underwear and shaken what he had to offer for the creative team.

I went back to Chicago that night and the boys in my dressing room agreed I would have been miserable doing jump splits in heels eight times a week, and that it was good I hadn’t booked the job. When the stage manager called places, I opened my collection of Cheever short stories and the rest of the boys descended the six flights of stairs to the stage, ready to do yet another performance.

The reality that I might never do another Broadway show began to sink in. My mind started sorting through options of what else I could do with my life. Maybe I’d look into psychology; maybe I could be a professor of English; maybe I could find some rich dude who wanted to buy me things. I thought for a moment of what it would be like to go to law school. Then I thought back to one night when I was nine or ten years old, sitting around the dinner table with my family. My dad was telling us about some negotiation he was handling for the commuter rail agency in LA, and how they’d spent two full hours that day arguing over one single word of the agreement. When he had finished speaking, I looked at him, shook my head and said, “Daddy, I will never, ever be a lawyer.”

My father had looked back at me with his broad, easy smile and said, “That’s a good thing, my boy. I think that’s a very good thing.”

December 23, 2011

Dispatches From a Guy Trying Unsuccessfully to Sell a Song in Nashville: Column 34: Mister Christmas by Charlie Hopper

by admin — Categories: Fun Stuff — Tags: , , , , , , Comments Off

“They call him Mister Christmas,” the man said, smoking and leaning on a mixing board installed in his one-bedroom apartment. “We recorded most of the demos right here.”

He indicated a closet outfitted with foam soundproofing, a little window and a microphone.

I bet landlords in Nashville have to deal with this sort of re-carpentering all the time.

“You can have that CD,” he said. It was in a thin case with a peel ’n stick label. The typeface was that “Invented For Dot Matrix Printers” font.

I said, “Ah, hm! Huh… yeah,” hoping I sounded appreciative as I read the song titles: “Forever Christmas Eve,” “Christmas in New York,” “The Season For Romance,” “All I Want For Christmas Is The Saints To Win.” There were, like, twenty Christmas songs.

“He just has this ability to write a new Christmas song, and it sounds like a classic,” said the man, taking another drag on his cigarette.

“Mister Christmas,” I said, showing that I had been listening.

The man stubbed out his cigarette as he exhaled slowly, drawing it out so I could look at the CD and reflect on Mister Christmas’s talent.

It was a hot Southern summer day as we sat in the little apartment studio. Mister Christmas’s friend wanted to talk about my attempt to crack Nashville’s code and, more importantly, my job as creative director at an advertising agency.

He was a jingle writer.

He co-writes advertising jingles with Mister Christmas.

He was hoping to sell me a jingle.

Jingles.

Ugh.

In general, those of us in advertising who sit next to smart, funny, eye-rolling wives as our commercials air don’t like to use the word “jingle.” If we write a song for an advertisement, we call it “custom music” or “an original track” or “a song.” The term “jingle” has the stink of an old-fashioned huckster ploy.

“If you have nothing to say, sing it,” is an old ad agency joke from years ago.

Straight-up actual capital-M Music, of course, is as important as ever. It’s in the execution: you can make it seem like you know what year it is, or you can make it sound like Casey’s got a long-distance dedication all cued up.

Once we had a client whose phone number was 444-4444. My friends Evan, Bill, Chris and I wrote a song for them making fun of having such an easy phone number. Evan wrote a lot of the best lines: “444-4444/Just dial four till someone answers.” “444-4444/It even works if you dial it backwards.” “444-4444/Coincidentally spells hi-hi-hig.”

We did a version with a Cuban band that I wrote a special lyric for: “444-4444/En español, son muchos quatros.”

Funny, no?

I thought our song was pretty hip. Sounded good. Atypical. I’d tell people, “See? We wrote an actual song. Just because it’s an ad, it doesn’t have to be a jingle.”

“Charlie,” said Bill the co-writer one day when I was straining to make my point. “Charlie—if you sing the phone number, it’s a jingle.”

He was right. It still hurts.

I’ll never be ready to admit that I co-wrote a “jingle.”

And now smoking guy wanted to sell my agency a whole jingle package (full sing :30 and :60, :30 w/announcer bed, :60 w/announcer bed). I’m sure he knew from years of cold-calling that I would politely promise to keep him in mind.

We both knew this was simply a chance to talk a little Nashville shop. And so it was, on a summer afternoon, that the conversation turned to Mister Christmas.

I don’t know. There’s something unsettling about being able to pump out Christmas stuff.

It feels jingly.

And so what? Why am I so sensitive? What exactly is the difference between a jingle and a song, and my objection to the former?

Well, a jingle wouldn’t exist unless someone was willing to pay for it. A song might.

A jingle efficiently touches on all its sales points. A song seems interested in finding something out for itself, pursuing an idea wherever it might go.

A jingle wraps up a little too neatly in favor of an argument it was rigged to win. A song might end with a satisfying conclusion, but the singer experiences a little friction on the way.

A jingle has no friction.

All the things I enjoy watching or hearing or singing to myself in the car contain friction.

Maybe that’s what I have against modern Christmas songs. Mostly they’re too pat. They touch all their snowy, candle-lit bases without any trouble, as if those bases were “quality, value, and service from a name you can trust.”

Most of the well-known, overplayed, standard Christmas songs contain an unusual idea and a touch of friction, expressed crisply.

So does Mr. Christmas deploy friction crisply? Good question. (Thanks.) (You’re welcome.) I took a listen to “The Season For Romance,” performed by Lee Ann Womack. It has a deft opening heavy with specific imagery:

She smiles at him, he says ‘Hello’
They stand beneath the mistletoe
Embarrassed by the awkward circumstance
He asks her if she’d like a drink
She says, ‘I better not, I think
Oh, what the heck, maybe just one glass’

It all goes down easy, and obeys Nashville’s recommended formula. But the reason you haven’t heard of it, in my opinion, is it doesn’t contain any new ideas. Are you surprised that these two fall in love? That happens in a lot of the standards. But here there’s no facing unafraid the plans that they made, no corn for popping.

There’s no date rapist spiking her drink and wheedling, “It’s up to your knees out there.”

And as far as “complicated but intriguing ideas,” I couldn’t find anything in Mister Christmas’s oeuvre comparable to a lonely person writing Christmas cards from a place where it doesn’t snow. By the way, I counted: the convoluted premise of “White Christmas” comes across in 53 words.

Of course, you can over steer. In a quest for crispy friction, you can just be sad or obscure (like a lot of rock bands who write Christmas songs). Sometimes it works beautifully (“2,000 Miles” by Chrissie Hynde).

Sometimes not.

I wrote Christmas songs one time for our rock band’s Christmas album. It was the guitar player’s idea to do a Christmas album, and a great idea at that. I’m proud of the songs both of us wrote.

But this was before my Nashville classes; my songs are way too oblique:

Taper, taper, burning down
Faint Nat King the only sound
Neighbor’s mini-window lights blinking a-rhythmically
Apartments around mine have emptied out
It’s still and silent, inside out
Waiting in the candlelight, nobody knows about me…

Or fast-talking but low-confidence:

Well, I woke up in the morning and I knew it wasn’t autumn
The leaves had disappeared someone’d come along and got ’em
And obviously the season of giving was here…
I’m sitting at my desk and I’m getting nothing done
Drawing faces in the margins, a grin on every one
Obviously this is not a brilliant career…

Or just dissatisfied and self-defeated:

Relatives in from out of town
Big naked flakes sticking to the ground
People in sweaters gather around
To talk and talk and talk
Talk and talk and talk
Have another glass of whatever that is
Maybe I should just shut up…

Why are the flakes naked? I don’t know. I like saying it. I sort of know what it means.

Nashville smiles, clicks the CD player off before the second verse, and wishes me a merry little etc., as they prepare to record another album of worn-out standards.

Probably recording a lot of them the wrong way.

Yes, there’s right ways and wrong ways.

It’s true: I have a lot of opinions about Christmas music.

We all do, don’t we? Some from our musical taste and preferences, some from simple sentiment or childhood associations.

Into it all wades Mister Christmas.

A jingle writer.

In Nashville.

Who knows? There was a day no one knew anything about the reindeer whose nose lit up.

That “modern classic” was written by Johnny Marks, based on a Montgomery Ward Christmas promotion. As it happens, after Rudolph and “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree,” Marks was known in the songwriting biz of the fifties as “Mister Christmas.”

Is smoking man’s jingle buddy the heir to Johnny Marks’ title? Sure. Why not? Let’s give it to him.

It’s the season of that, you know.

December 19, 2011

List: Holiday Beers by Meg Pokrass

by admin — Categories: Fun Stuff — Tags: , , Comments Off

Pop’s Alzheimer’s Lost Abbey Ale

Phoned-In Sick Too Brown

Angry Carolers Dingdong Oatmeal Stout

Pre Post-holiday Depression Winter Warmer

Jolly Holly Golly Pig Stout Lager Brew

Last Year’s XXXmas/ER Visit Pilsner

Don’t Bring The Dog This Time You Asshole Pale Ale

Dad’s Bi-Polar Disorder Porter

Totally Smoked Addiction Alcohol-Reduced 2%

A Wunderful Wut? Hard Cider

Virusbreath Barleywine

Messiah Re-Gifting Passive-Aggressive Bold

Family Supplier’s Hemp Ale

December 16, 2011

No Fear of Flying: Kamikaze Missions in Death, Sex, and Comedy: A Cure for the Human Condition by Michelle Mirsky

by admin — Categories: Fun Stuff — Tags: , , , , , , , , Comments Off

Of the many fears I gladly shed in the wake of my son’s death, I miss the relentless dread of disappointment the least. Had I realized the moment the fear left me, I might have raised a glass of something aged and expensive, made a big to-do. As it happened, the terror of disappointment left me so quietly that by the time I realized it was gone all that was left was to search my recollections for the moment when I gave up the ghost and became brave and new, the border between before and after. The instant when my existence was liberated from the orbit of disappointment’s sun, came in July a few days before what would have been Lev’s 4th birthday. I’m sitting on the top step of the highest staircase in my parents’ very tall house in upstate NY, the house in which I grew up. And I’m stewing in a cold soup of disaffection.

Even though he’s been gone nearly 8 months at this point, I’ve been dreading the approach of the day Lev officially won’t get any older, the day he won’t have a cake or presents or a celebration of making it to the next buoy. That day, I think, will make it all real. I remember Lev’s 1st birthday party in the backyard of this house, co-hosted with his “best friend,” my dad, who turned 70 that same year. I think about Lev taking his first steps—at age almost-2—in the living room two stories down. I think about how it had felt the year before when Lev, then 3 and with defiant swirls of recently returned strawberry blond hair, was there in the house with me for the last time. I wouldn’t have taken this summer trip down memory lane, but for Joss, who I am delivering to his dad and grandma for a Hamptons vacation.

In this moment, I’m sitting a few steps away from my childhood bedroom and thinking about how I used to get the dry heaves from nerves the night before going to summer camp (and how Joss, who’ll head to camp for the first time in a matter of days is not at all nervous; not worried in the slightest). I’m thinking about how it felt to be a lovesick teenager in this house. And how it felt to explain to my parents that I was breaking up with the first man they thought I would marry, and the next one, and the one I did marry. And I think about the men in my life now, who are making me crazy—every last one of them—and giving me little in return. And I’m trying to decide what’s next, what the fuck I’m going to do.

I’m sitting at the top of my parents’ house and I’m reading, on the tiny screen of my smart phone, these words: “Nietzsche famously said, ‘Whatever doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.’ But what he failed to stress is that it almost kills you. Disappointment stings…” The words are from Conan O’Brien’s 2010 commencement address at Dartmouth College, a year after he was forced out of his job as the host of the tonight show and replaced by Jay Leno. The key takeaway of O’Brien’s Dartmouth address was the idea that having your worst fears realized is—maybe—the best thing that could ever happen to you (except that it’s still the worst). Of everything he’d learned from his Ivy League education, in life, through the cutthroat trials of show business, this platitude from Nietzsche contained the point Conan O’Brien wanted to drive home. That and “Disappointment stings.” In addition to feeling tremendous empathy for this tortured giant ginger of a man who’d been disillusioned on a grand scale, I thought to myself: “WELL, FUCKING DUH.”

Historically, for as long as I can remember, my relationship to disappointment was something like respect rooted in terror. Disappointment was the star around which my world revolved. Like Le Petit Prince, I lived alone on my planet (whose poles were marked at one end by the fear of displeasing anyone ever and at the other by the anticipation of being let down by everyone always). The sting of disappointment was forever hot in my cheeks and cold in my soul. Over the years I learned to imagine the worst and to gird myself against the impact of my own poor showing or the failure of others to meet my expectations. I learned to aim low in the hope that by not aiming for success I could—in effect—dodge failure. To that end, I moved thousands of miles away from my family (to evade their judgment of my un-ambitious career choices and oft abandoned creative endeavors), I stayed in terrible romances to avoid the end (or worse: the beginning of something new, ripe with fresh potential for disillusionment). To put it plainly, I hid. But the years of living in the literal fishbowl of Lev’s hospital room had put me under a microscope and made the idea of controlling my image—managing others expectations of me—moot. Instead I put my head down and submitted to the next indignity.

That evening, while Joss played with my mom and his cousin, my brother and I had gone to see the documentary Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop, about what was ostensibly O’Brien’s darkest year. Although the reasons for our disenchantment were dissimilar, I felt an affinity with Conan O’Brien’s openness about how much his downfall at NBC wrecked him. And I felt a sense of solidarity with O’Brien’s decision to go bold with his next endeavor. When I got home from the movies, I ate great forkfuls of the Dartmouth speech till the plate was empty. And when I was done, I sat a bit stunned on that familiar staircase with my darkest year turning rapidly to light. I thought about what disappointment had meant for Conan O’Brien, an admittedly blessed and lucky man—a proudly self-effacing Harvard–educated comic legend. Ambitious, driven, at the top of his field, O’Brien was financially and creatively successful with a happy, robust family to love and support him. Disappointment came for him as it comes for all of us and it nearly killed his will to create. Maybe it stung worse for this man who—on the eve of his yearlong television blackout—famously urged America not to be cynical. He hadn’t spent his whole life steeling himself for failure. For all his accolades, he was sucker-punched by disappointment. Conan O’Brien’s unceremonious ouster from NBC (which, let’s be honest, amounted to a forced paid vacation with limitless possibilities) sent him into a deep depression. I think I must have realized in that instant that disappointment is the passive-aggressive cousin of death. It’s not something any one of us can avoid successfully. It will get every one of us.

I hadn’t been afraid of death for a long time. I’d resigned myself to the infinite sleep when I was a teenager. I’d spent my early adolescence calculating the odds of Reagan or Gorbachev pushing the red button at any given moment, terrorized by the inevitable end. Odd as it may seem, the tense denouement of the Cold War coupled with my atheism (and related belief that there’s nothing after this life) forced me to develop some coping skills around my own mortality. Disappointment stuck around, though, as a major driver. Given the attention I lavished on mental dry runs of every possible tragedy, I might have fancied myself prepared for Lev’s death. If not prepared, I was at least more than familiar with that particular sad ending. I’d practiced this dance before. I prepared to be without Lev before I was ever with him. When we’d gotten the first diagnosis, when I was 22 weeks pregnant, the doctor had taken us into his office and told me that the kid growing in me was a boy whose heart had formed all kinds of backwards and that if we went to Kansas, we could legally terminate the gentle kicking in my midsection and my need for designer maternity jeans. We demurred on the late-term abortion, but after that kind of halftime show, the rest of the pregnancy was your basic gallows-walk. At the end of the road was complex surgery on an organ the size of a macadamia nut. I busied myself with plucking all negative scenarios from the galaxy of possible outcomes and making peace with them long before—or if—they were real.

In advance of Lev’s birth, I favored superstition. I wouldn’t sanction a baby shower. I didn’t buy a crib or arrange the nursery. I left the world alone. I thought perhaps if no one saw him coming, if I didn’t disturb anything, there would be less of a blast radius when the world exploded. As it happened, I gave birth to a perfect-looking baby and had to hand him over to be cut into pieces. When I left the hospital without him, my heart was shrapnel. And so Lev’s life began.

At the end of his life, after heart surgery and brain surgery and cancer and respite, when Lev’s disease returned with a vengeance and killed him inside of a month, my fear was the truss that restrained me when I might have reached for optimism. I made every attempt to extinguish hope where I found it as if it were contagious and might infect me. As he fought and we all fought with him, and after somehow always managing to right the flight path of the airplane in free-fall to which Lev’s life had become analogous, we lost. During our final weeks with the little lion, my ewer of disappointment reached maximum capacity. I had done everything I could to keep disappointment and death at bay. But we were beaten.

The reign of disappointment wasn’t over when the brightest star went dark. Lev’s death began a series of are you kidding me with this shit?! humbling experiences: the realization of exactly how hard it would be to be divorced, to co-parent Joss in separate houses, to move on; a real estate Sophie’s Choice, online dating (!), befriending (and defriending) awful people who did not have my back. It was, to say the least, a crushing weight.

There was a period surrounding Lev’s death when I thought perhaps I might die too. I was more or less indifferent to the thought. During Lev’s final stretch in the hospital (3 months all-told), I lost my voice for several weeks—the result of a convulsing cough. I’d somehow dropped 25 lbs without trying (at Lev’s funeral, I’d worn two jackets and a belt to disguise the fact that none of my clothes fit). Not infrequently, during this time, my heart would leap and flop in my chest and I’d feel as if I might black out. I’d go to my car, lay down till it passed. Part of me almost hoped an actual affliction had taken root and would quietly end me. My attempts to address normal activities of daily living in those weeks when I’d thought I was dying resembled that aspect of a dream when one tries to dial a phone and one’s fingers behave like leaden sponges. Bills sat unpaid, I forgot to feed the dog. Joss went to visit his grandmother in Arizona. My hair grew dirty and took on bizarre shapes. And then Lev died. And I did not die. And that was that.

The vagaries turned concrete by Lev’s death were staggering, but they were no longer terrifying question marks. I could grab these certainties by the balls and crush. I could lurch forward. Lev’s illness was the force of gravity that kept me tethered to planet Terrifying Letdown. And after he died each course correction served to erode my fear of the next shitstorm. I’d swallowed a bitter horse-sized pill of disappointment and my fever had broken. I’d let the fear of it go so completely, it took an earnest question from a wise man to bring its absence to my attention. Of course it still stings when the plan goes kablooey. But the fear is no longer an out-of-control speedboat dragging me behind as I try to water ski. In fact, it was nearly drowning in all of it that saved me, made me fearless. Turns out, Nietzsche was right. And so was Conan O’Brien.

December 16, 2011

Norse History for Bostonians: A Brief Introduction to Norse Economic Policy for Bostonians by Rowdy Geirsson

by admin — Categories: Fun Stuff — Tags: , , , , Comments Off

Yah know, yah lose your job these days n’ yah have to go through this whole fuckin’ bureaucratic mess just tah get your fuckin’ unemployment check. I mean the way it wohrks is yah got to call in tah the fuckin’ cahreer centah hotline just tah even staht the fuckin’ process n’ I’ll be damned if yah even manage tah get through since yah got half the entiyah city of Boston tryin’ tah call in all at once. N’ then tah add insult tah injuhry yah gottah considah the fact that this whole mess all stahted down in New York of all fuckin’ places in the first place as though fuckin’ us ovah fah 86 years straight wasn’t a fuckin’ ‘nough. So now you’re standin’ there on fuckin’ hold till some recohrdin’ finally tells yah tah fuck off n’ call back latah but it’s already your 4th time callin’ in your allotted time slot fah the day n’ in the background you’re hearin’ Johnny Damon be a fuckin’ prick on the radio n’ it all just makes yah wannah smash the phone against the fuckin’ wall n’ pick a fuckin’ fight with the first person yah see.

So as yah can pretty much well tell, what this all basically ends up amountin’ tah is that yah got this system that pretty much fuckin’ guarantees that a real substantial paht of the population is gonnah have some serious fuckin’ tempahs flarin’ up whenevah the economy tanks n’ the funny thing ‘bout that is that these guys like Ted Kennedy n’ John Kerry who were the kinds of guys behind this whole system all based it on a model that came out of the same paht of the world that also produced some of the most wohrst-tempah’ed unemployed guys in all of fuckin’ histahry.

See, back in the late 700s the unemployment rate in Scandinavia was skyrocketin’ like the cost of a fuckin’ college education. Responsible business practices weren’t very populah in Scandinavia back in those days n’ so what yah ended up with was this unsustainable expansion of the fahmin’ industry n’ added tah that was the fact that it coincided with a population boom that made our post-war one look like a fuckin’ calamity of stillbohrns. So now yah got all these youngah sons of families lookin’ fah work on the fahm n’ not bein’ able to find any ‘cause all the jobs went tah their oldah brothahs. N’ as fah the women, well they didn’t really figyah intah the employment system any so there isn’t much tah say about them, but yah know, shit must have sucked fah them too ‘cause how could it not have.

Anyway, the point I’m tryin’ tah make here is that there wasn’t any sohrt of safety net so all these poor outtah worhk bastahds were basically like, “Fuck, what do we do now?” Well what they decided to do was tah legislate a Scandinavian economic stimulant package by rapin’ n’ pillagin’ the fuck outtah Europe fah the next 300 years. N’ the thing that was really fuckin’ unique about this stimulant package was that it actually stimulated the fuckin’ economy, yah know as opposed tah bankruptin’ the coffahs by siphonin’ off huge sums of govuhnment funds tah bailout n’ pay off businesses n’ individuals who have no real chance or hope of evah payin’ it back.

Now there are some guys out there who would say that the Scandinavian economic model of the late first millennium was pretty fuckin’ discriminatahry. N’ yah know, I suppose they got a point ‘cause if yah lived in England or Ireland or France or pretty much any fuckin’ where outside of Sweden, Nahway, n’ Denmahk in those days, odds were the Scandinavians were probably gonnah try not just tah unfairly tax your ass but also sell it into fuckin’ slavery. Sure, this might have been ‘bout as fair as Bobby Orr takin’ a shot against a kid who’s nevah even been on skates befohr n’ there were protests tah this sorht of economic imbalance n’ all, but usually they just ended in massacre n’ the Vikings just kept on doin’ shit howevah they so fuckin’ pleased.

But the one othah intriguin’ thing about these Scandinavian guys was that they actually had this “lagom” attitude meanin’ that even though they had no qualm ovah exploitin’ the fuck out of othahs, they still all tried tah treat each othah pretty fuckin’ equally n’ that included, yah know, tryin’ tah share their profits equally with each othah as well. N’ now if yah live in Cambridge or Brookline or one these othah hahdcore intellectual type places then I guess yah might want tah try tah connect that tah modern wealth redistribution or top-level corporate bonus schemes, yah know, whatevah gets yah blood flowin’.

But anyway, tah get back tah what we were talkin’ ‘bout, aftah completin’ one of these international business trips the Scandinavian guys would usually just head on back home tah one of their Nohrdic hahbahs with shit-tons of silvah, gold, n’ slaves n’ then they’d set up shop tah do some fuckin’ trade. N’ they’d probably give some of their gold tah the local king too just as a gift just so as tah stay in good favah with that guy ‘cause one thing you sure as fuck didn’t want back then was fah the king tah come ovah n’ staht fuckin’ around with your business like he thinks he’s the fuckin’ IRS or somethin’, but even with that bizarre voluntahry/mandahtahry tax lots of times a good numbah of these guys would still have enough left ovah tah buy their own fahm or boat or whatevah n’ then they’d hire a bunch of new guys tah work fah them n’ if that right there isn’t proof of a stimulant tah the economy then I don’t know what the fuck is.

December 15, 2011

Really funny jokes-Facebook Addiction

by admin — Categories: Jokes — Tags: , , , , , , , Comments Off

If you are on Facebook, I am sure you will find this hilarious.

The 76-year-old woman walked down the hallway of Clearview Addictions Clinic, searching for the right department. She passed signs for the “Heroin Addiction Department (HAD),” the “Smoking Addiction Department (SAD)” and the “Bingo Addiction Department (BAD).” Then she spotted the department she was looking for: “Facebook Addiction Department (FAD).”

It was the busiest department in the clinic, with about three dozen people filling the waiting room, most of them staring blankly into their Blackberries and iPhones. A middle-aged man with unkempt hair was pacing the room, muttering,”I need to milk my cows. I need to milk my cows.”

A twenty-something man was prone on the floor, his face buried in his hands, while a curly-haired woman comforted him.

“Don’t worry. It’ll be all right.”

“I just don’t understand it. I thought my update was LOL-worthy, but none of my friends even clicked the ‘like’ button.”

“How long has it been?”

“Almost five minutes. That’s like five months in the real world.”

The 76-year-old woman waited until her name was called, then followed the receptionist into the office of Alfred Zulu, Facebook Addiction Counselor.

“Please have a seat, Edna,” he said with a warm smile. “And tell me how it all started.”

“Well, it’s all my grandson’s fault. He sent me an invitation to join Facebook. I had never heard of Facebook before, but I thought it was something for me, because I usually have my face in a book.”

“How soon were you hooked?”

“Faster than you can say ‘create a profile.’ I found myself on Facebook at least eight times each day — and more times at night. Sometimes I’d wake up in the middle of the night to check it, just in case there was an update from one of my new friends in India . My husband didn’t like that. He said that friendship is a precious thing and should never be outsourced.”

“What do you like most about Facebook?”

“It makes me feel like I have a life. In the real world, I have only five or six friends, but on Facebook, I have 674. I’m even friends with Juan Carlos Montoya.”

“Who’s he?”

“I don’t know, but he’s got 4,000 friends, so he must be famous.”

“Facebook has helped you make some connections, I see.”

“Oh yes. I’ve even connected with some of the gals from high school — I still call them ‘gals.’ I hadn’t heard from some of them in ages, so it was exciting to look at their profiles and figure out who’s retired, who’s still working, and who’s had some work done. I love browsing their photos and reading their updates. I know where they’ve been on vacation, which movies they’ve watched, and whether they hang their toilet paper over or under. I’ve also been playing a game with some of them.”

“Let me guess. Farmville?”

“No, Mafia Wars. I’m a Hitman. No one messes with Edna.”

“Wouldn’t you rather meet some of your friends in person?”

“No, not really. It’s so much easier on Facebook. We don’t need to gussy ourselves up. We don’t need to take baths or wear perfume or use mouthwash. That’s the best thing about Facebook — you can’t smell anyone. Everyone is attractive, because everyone has picked a good profile pic. One of the gals is using a profile pic that was taken, I’m pretty certain, during the Eisenhower Administration. “

“What pic are you using?”

“Well, I spent five hours searching for a profile pic, but couldn’t find one I really liked. So I decided to visit the local beauty salon.”

“To make yourself look prettier?”

“No, to take a pic of one of the young ladies there. That’s what I’m using.”

“Didn’t your friends notice that you look different?”

“Some of them did, but I just told them I’ve been doing lots of yoga.”

“When did you realize that your Facebooking might be a problem?”

“I realized it last Sunday night, when I was on Facebook and saw a message on my wall from my husband: ‘I moved out of the house five days ago. Just thought you should know.’”

“What did you do?”

“What else? I unfriended him of course!”

December 14, 2011

The Jims Organic Smut Acid Story by Matthew Duverne Hutchinson

by admin — Categories: Fun Stuff — Tags: , , , , , Comments Off

Why organic smut acid?

In 1893, my great-grandfather James set out to destroy an obscene painting at the Chicago World’s Fair. At the time, very few resources existed for people like my great granddad—simple folks with a simple passion for destroying pornographic imagery and satanic idols. Back in those days, if you were lucky enough to track down a strong enough acid for the job, chances are it wasn’t very good for your body or the planet, as great granddad soon found out. After settling for a second-rate hydrochloric that left the painting mostly intact and his eyeballs badly burned, Jim set out on his life’s mission: create the world’s first hypoallergenic, all-organic acid for throwing on immoral things.

A commitment to quality

Great Grandpa Jim always believed that going organic didn’t have to mean sacrificing quality. Today, our family’s continuing passion for great acid insures your family a perfect smut burn time after time. Over the last century, we’ve refined our signature acid blend one ingredient at a time. The sulfur used in Jim’s Organic Smut Acid is always cultivated the old-fashioned way—lovingly unearthed in small batches from our cooperatively-owned volcanic salt domes. We do it that way not because it’s easy, but because it’s right.

Though times may have changed, our family’s commitment to making the world’s finest organic smut acid hasn’t. And as immorality has evolved, so have our products. Have you (through no fault of your own) encountered offensive imagery on the internet? Our two gallon Earth’s Way Acid Bucket is perfect for dumping on desktop computers, while our Pocket Sunshine Pack is just the right amount of acid for throwing on your smart phone. Your acid, your way.

Fact: whether you want to or not, you are going to encounter graphic, decadent smut in today’s world. Pictures of men and women doing things to each other that no decent human being should ever see. And it can be difficult to look away. Extremely difficult. There was that one video that was getting e-mailed around—you know, that one with the twins on the shrimping boat? For months, I couldn’t get it out of my head. Even now, I’ll be at JCPenny trying on some work slacks, and the A/C vent happens to be directed just the right way up my pant leg and there I am on the deck of that boat again. The smell of foamy brine in my nose. The strange and unfamiliar sounds of those twins in my ears. And it is precisely at times like these that I’m so grateful to have a wholesome, pesticide-free acid to throw on that A/C vent.

Stewardship for a changing planet

Let’s cut the crap. Is running a family-owned throwing acid business going to make us rich? No. Does the increasingly litigious nature of our society make it difficult to stay in the acid business? Certainly. Are we aware of the allegations made against our company by both privately organized citizens’ advocacy groups and the federal government? Yes. Do we believe they are founded on anything more than jealousy and a patent misunderstanding of our way of life? No. Will we start paying taxes on what we rightly believe is our sovereign territory high in the mountains of West Virginia? No. Because that’s the way great granddad Jim would have wanted it. I know this because I have spoken to his ghost.

At the end of the day, at Jim’s Organic Smut Acid, we still believe that a healthy body begins with a balanced lifestyle: exercise, diet, laughter, protecting the borders of the land deeded to you by the archangel Uriel, and throwing acid on anything that makes you sexually aroused. Simple values. Simple results. From our family to yours, we hope you enjoy using our acid products as much as we’ve enjoyed creating them for you.

December 14, 2011

The Long Walk: A Column About Washington: The Ballad of Thom Moore by Alec Bings

by admin — Categories: Fun Stuff — Tags: , , , , , , , , Comments Off

The first thing you might notice is the silence. It’s not an empty office; people hover amid cluttered desks and gray cubicle walls and piles upon piles of unclaimed campaign paraphernalia. But the low-ceilinged, fluorescent-lit space prickles in its muted hum—and with nothing to drown it out, a laptop’s thin audio draws attention. That audio is the focus of a huddled few, and their moods are darkening.

It’s December 3rd, and this small group—cloistered in Herman Cain’s campaign headquarters in Urbandale, Iowa—is learning of their boss’ exit from the race via streaming video. It’s shocking, certainly, as yet-unaware staff members elsewhere in the building are still moving furniture to make room for staff from the national operation arriving to prepare for the caucuses next month. Volunteer sign-up sheets hanging on the wall indicate names slotted to work through the upcoming week.

Reporters on hand to witness these last official moments from within Cain HQ describe only tempered grief from paid staffers. But it’s a different story amid the volunteers. One woman who had supported Cain since January is described as “overcome with emotion” and her son, Thom Moore, speaks to a reporter with tears welling in his eyes.

“I feel like I’ve lost my best friend,” Thom says.

“I lost control of any capacity that I had,” Thom says.

“It’s taking everything in me not to fall apart,” Thom says.

This hyper-emo gut-reaction to a campaign’s end is distressing but hardly atypical. Certainly the fact that Thom’s heartache comes thanks to handsy dimwit Herman Cain doesn’t make for reduced pain. If anything, the rending of garments in Iowa and elsewhere gives Cain’s semiserious ego-cruise an air of tragic grandeur it never frankly deserved. But the passion it apparently created in his devotees is instructive.

Campaigns make for rough business. When people find themselves shoving their life’s priorities down a notch to work for free on behalf of a stranger, it triggers something approaching sacramental. With campaigns in a constant battle against time, volunteers often take on consistently greater commitments than they ever expected in a kind of Peter Principle of emotional availability. These true believers often don’t talk about anything save the campaign. Their near-pathological devotion causes them to live in an endless loop of Panglossian daydreams exploding with possible paths to glorious victory. And yet, at the end of all that energy and all that effort, just about everyone’s political messiah steps up to a microphone, waves, and admits that it was all for nothing, sorry. In the peak of a campaign, true believers can feel awfully alone; on the day their raison d’être goes extinct, that desolation becomes self-consuming.

In our modern political era, campaigns for president tend to emanate from the candidate—one who is either rich or charismatic, but usually both. These contests base themselves around the virtues of the person, and policy platforms simply follow along. This is true for the brief candidacy of Herman Cain—the man literally works as a motivational speaker—but also for success stories à la the movement around then Sen. Barack Obama. A candidate’s enthusiasts are obsessives of the individual first and foremost—and for these diehards, a loss is a drastic outcome akin to a death.

That brand of interminable, personal agony is a far cry from life among Washington’s federal employees. Working in this city offers up a more pragmatic milieu; once you’re in the suck, you can see the world for what it is. There are greater causes, bigger fights to be waged. Staffers move from congressmen to higher-ranking congressmen or from federal agencies to the White House and back, all striving for the same goal. It’s a thousand-year war that was here before we arrived and it will outlive our short stay. Which is all to point out that the world of national politics stands in pretty stark contrast from the individualized crusades found in your quadrennial primaries and caucuses. Look, we’re used to failure. Wizened D.C. staffers have a habit of locking their shoulders on the “shrug” setting. It doesn’t matter which party you belong to—amid all the compromised wins and temporary fixes, there is inescapable disappointment in D.C. But it is rare for Washington lifers to respond to disastrous outcomes in the manner of young Thom Moore. We’re frustrated like everyone else—more really, the inanity is truly terrifying up close—but our balled-up fists are directed more toward the rancid system than some toppling of a personal hero who promised to change the world.

To put it another way, we’re constantly approaching tragedy here—let me check my calendar for the next scheduled government shutdown—and we’ve learned to roll with it. Think about most folks’ virginal experience with national politics. They usually get their first bite at the apple working on, or at least caring about, a campaign. “I was never interested in politics until Candidate X came along,” they say. And, inevitably, as the more quixotic candidates start falling by the wayside, fanatics with their fervency-coated beliefs are destroyed by the loss. Sure, that feeling doesn’t go away; even hardened political operatives suffer badly after defeats. But for the uninitiated, the devastation seems to demand a force majeure clause to free them from emotional liability. For most defeated candidates, their exultant season on the national stage is gone. That moment for their volunteers is also past. In the end, it’s necrophilistic to spend too much time there.

At least, that’s how Washington works. To care too greatly about a loss or a disappointment or some specific renegade asshole in a position of power is an intensively seriocomic gesture. The world of campaigns is the place for idealist purity, as perhaps it should be. Yet the dirty secret of presidential politics holds that no matter which Republican wins the nomination, their governance—should they win the White House—would be essentially identical to each others’. (For the purposes of this discussion I am not factoring in a President Ron Paul, as I’m not sure but I think there’s a decent chance America would revert to a barter economy.) With any GOP win, party honchos will fill the administration with the same members of their establishment, put the same Supreme Court justice nominees on the bench, etc.—kind of like President Obama surrounding himself with the Clinton alumni network. And as Republican nominees abandon their hopes over the upcoming year, their followers will move closer to the cognitive restructuring they have coming their way, a melancholic drifting from differentiated perfection toward an inevitable systemic conformity. And in that sense, I sympathize with Iowa’s Thom Moore and his rapturous agony. Welcome to hell, kid.

December 12, 2011

Superman jokes

by admin — Categories: Jokes — Tags: , , Comments Off

Superman’s been wearing that one outfit for over half a century.

He’s strong–and a little gamy, I think! Now I know why Superman left Krypton.
Earth was the only place where he could get steroids!

Lois Lane is Crazy about Superman.
On Valentine’s Day, she sends a card to the phone company!

Because of his X-ray vision, Superman is unable to pass an eye test.
When he looks at an eye-chart, he sees through it to a billboard in the next county!

As mild-mannered Clark Kent, Superman is afraid of girls.
He’s worried that he’ll run into the one he stole the red and blue suit from!

Superman can fly across the country in ten minutes.
A little longer, if he’s on stand-by!

Superman used to fly across the country much faster.
Now he has to go by way of Atlanta!

I think Superman would be cooler if he was the Man of Reinforced Plexiglass.
Bullets would still bounce off, but we’d get the added bonus of seeing real superhero internal organs.

© 2012 Daily Giggles All rights reserved